Journal Name:
- The Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education
Key Words:
Author Name |
---|
Abstract (2. Language):
In today’s results-oriented, fast-moving business environment, it is critical for trainers to
demonstrate the value of training to the organization: There is nothing inherently
valuable about training. It is performance gains that training catalyzes that give it worth
(Graber, 2000). This is why evaluations tied to business results are becoming
commonplace.
If you ask training professionals about measuring training, most will start talking about
levels of evaluation, referring to Kirkpatrick’s landmark evaluation model developed in
1959. Kirkpatrick’s levels of evaluation have been the industry standard for nearly half a
century.
However, many professionals now believe that elearning and a shift in emphasis toward
performance improvement have changed the training business so that these levels are no
longer completely relevant.
The purpose of this paper is to discuss what similarities and differences exist between
evaluating elearning and traditional classroom instruction, how Kirkpatrick’s evaluation
levels are currently conducted, why conducting Kirkpatrick’s Level 4 evaluation is so
difficult to do, why elearning evaluation has evolved to include return-on-investment
(ROI) calculations, and whether other evaluation methods currently practiced are more
relevant and useful.
Bookmark/Search this post with
FULL TEXT (PDF):
- 1